Tisdall v Health Insurance Commission
[2002] FCA 97
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2002-02-15
Before
Tamberlin J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (22 paragraphs)
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT 1 This is an application for judicial review of findings made by the Professional Services Review Committee ("the Committee") under s 106L of the Health Insurance Act 1973 (Cth) ("the Act") which found that: "…the conduct of … Dr Peter Thomas Tisdall [the applicant] … in connection with the rendering of services which were the subject of the referral from the Health Insurance Commission was, in the Committee's opinion, unacceptable to the general body of general practitioners practicing in general medical practice in Australia." 2 The application raises issues as to the scope of the inquiry, procedural fairness and the role of an expert tribunal.
The legislative scheme 3 In order to determine these issues, it is necessary to consider the scheme under which the decision was made. 4 The Act establishes a Professional Services Review Scheme, the framework of which is ss 81 to 124A of the Act. The Act provides that the Health Insurance Commission ("the Commission") may refer to the Director of Professional Services Review ("the Director") the conduct of a person relating to whether the person has engaged in inappropriate practice in connection with the rendering or initiation of services (s 86 of the Act). 5 The present case is concerned with rendering of services. "Service" is relevantly defined in s 81(1) to mean a service for which, at the time it was rendered or initiated, a medicare benefit was payable, or there was a prescribing of a pharmaceutical benefit. Section 81(2) provides that for Part VAA of the Act, general medical practice is to be taken as a speciality by a medical practitioner. 6 "Inappropriate practice" is relevantly defined in s 82(1) as follows: "82(1) A practitioner engages in inappropriate practice if the practitioner's conduct in connection with rendering or initiating services is such that a Committee could reasonably conclude that: (a) if the practitioner is a specialist - the conduct would be unacceptable to the general body of the members of the specialty in which the practitioner was practising when he or she rendered or initiated the services …" 7 Under s 87 the referral must specify whether it relates to certain matters: "87(1) The referral must specify whether it relates to one or both of the following: (a) specified services; (b) services rendered or initiated by a practitioner that are one or more of the following: (i) services of a specified class; (ii) services provided to a specified class of persons; (iii) services provided within a specified location; (iv) services provided within a specified period." 8 The content and form of the referral by the Commission must comply with guidelines which the Minister is empowered to make about the content and form of the referral (see ss 87(2) and (3) of the Act). 9 Under s 83 the Minister may appoint a medical practitioner to be the Director of Professional Services Review. 10 The Director must set up a Committee to consider whether a person under review has engaged in inappropriate practice unless satisfied that there are insufficient grounds on which a Committee could reasonably find that the person has engaged in inappropriate practice in connection with the referred service or that the Director has disqualified the person under review (s 93). Neither of those circumstances apply in the present case. The Committee set up under s 93 is to be composed of a Chairperson who is a Deputy Director and two other Panel members. Under s 95(2) the Chairperson and the other Panel members must be, (i) practitioners, (ii) who belong to the profession in which the practitioner was practising, (iii) when he or she rendered or initiated the referred services. The constitution of the Committee can therefore be seen as one of peer experts in general practice, who were engaged in practice at the time the services were rendered. In the present case the Committee consisted of three experienced general practitioners. Two members had general practices in country areas and one member conducted a general practice in an outer suburban area. 11 There is provision in s 96 for a challenge to be made to the appointment of a Committee member on specified grounds. In the present case a challenge was made to the appointment of one of the Panel members, Dr Demediuk, but this failed. It was based on a submission that the doctor was likely to be biased, or that he was likely to be thought, on reasonable grounds, to be biased. A subsequent challenge to this refusal of disqualification was dismissed. 12 Under s 98, the Committee has wide power to regulate the proceedings at its meetings which must be held in private. It may for the purposes of its inquiries into referred matters inform itself in any manner it thinks fit (s 98(3)). Questions arising at meetings of the Committee are decided by a majority of votes of the Committee members present and voting; the Committee member presiding does not have a casting vote (s 99(5)). 13 The Committee must give notice of a hearing to the person under review at least 14 days prior to the hearing and, importantly for present purposes, it must give particulars "of the matter to which the hearing relates" (s 102 (3)). 14 The person under review is entitled to appear at the hearing and to be accompanied by a lawyer or other adviser, but is not entitled to be represented at the hearing by a lawyer or adviser (s 103). The practitioner is entitled to question any person giving evidence at the hearing and to address the Committee. The Committee has a discretion as to whether it will allow an adviser (other than a lawyer) of the person under review to question a person giving evidence at the hearing and to address the Committee on behalf of the practitioner. 15 Section 104 empowers the Committee by notice to require the person under review to appear at the hearing and give evidence to the Committee and to appear at the hearing and produce such documents as are referred to in the notice of hearing. If a practitioner knowingly gives a false or misleading answer or produces a document that contains a statement that is false or misleading in material particulars, without identifying the respects in which the person knows it to be misleading, a penalty is imposed. If the person does not produce documents referred to in the notice from the Committee and appears at the hearing, there are further penalties (s 105). The privilege against self-incrimination is available. 16 The regulation of the conduct of the hearing is within the discretion of the presiding member (s 106). The Committee is not bound by the rules of evidence but may inform itself on any matter in any way it thinks appropriate (s 106(2)). Evidence may be taken on oath or affirmation (s 106A). A penalty applies if a person appearing as a witness at a hearing without reasonable excuse refuses or fails to be sworn or make an affirmation or refuses to answer a question required by a Committee member to answer or refuses or fails to produce a document that is required for production. 17 Under s 106F(1) a Committee member has the same protection and immunity as a Justice of the High Court in the performance of his or her duty. 18 The Committee under s 106L must give the Determining Officer its final written report setting out its findings as to whether the practitioner was a specialist practitioner when the referred services were rendered and whether the practitioner's conduct in connection with rendering of the referred services was in the Committee's opinion unacceptable to the general body of the members of the speciality in which the practitioner was practising at that time. In this case members of the general body of general practitioners. The Determining Officer decides what steps should be taken on the report, and must give a copy of the final determination to the Director of the Commission. 19 The Determining Officer within seven days after receiving the Committee report must give a copy of the report to the practitioner under review (s 106R). Where the report contains a finding that the practitioner has engaged in inappropriate practice in connection with rendering or initiating of some or all of the referred services, the Determining Officer must make a draft determination and within 14 days of receiving the report from the Committee, give copies to the practitioner and to the Director (s 106S(1)). This draft determination must be accompanied by a statement inviting the person under review to make written submissions within 14 days, suggesting changes to the draft determination (s 106S(2)). Within that period the practitioner may make submissions to the Determining Officer. At the end of the 14 day period during which the practitioner may make submissions and within 35 days after receiving the Committee's report, the Determining Officer must make a final determination relating to the person under review (s 106T(1)). 20 The final determination must contain one or more specified directions ranging from reprimand and counselling to repayment of benefits and disqualification. 21 The final determination takes effect 28 days after the Determining Officer provides a copy of it to the person under review (s 106V(1)). 22 There is provision for review of the decision of a Determining Officer at the request of the practitioner. This request is made to the Minister who must forward the request to the President of the Professional Services Review Tribunal. Where a person makes a request for review of a determination, the person may appear in person or be represented by another person at the proceedings on the review and the representative is given the opportunity to address the Tribunal. Where the determination is a final determination, the Determining Officer may be represented at the proceeding (s 117(3)). The proceeding before the Tribunal must be conducted with as little formality and technicality as a proper consideration of the matter before the Tribunal permits and the procedure is within the discretion of the President (s 118). Under s 119 the Tribunal, after considering the matter to which the determination relates, may affirm or set aside the determination or make any other determination that the Determining Officer is empowered to make under the section. 23 In accordance with s 124A, a party to proceedings before the Tribunal may appeal, on a question of law only, to the Federal Court of Australia from any decision of the Tribunal in that proceedings. 24 "Professional service" is defined in s 3 of the Act as: "a service … to which an item relates, being a clinically relevant service that is rendered by or on behalf of a medical practitioner …" (Emphasis added) 25 The word "item" is defined in s 3 as an item in the table. The word "table" is defined in that section as consisting of the general medical services table prescribed under s 4 which provides for regulations prescribing a table of medical services setting out the items of medical services and the amount of fees applicable in respect of each item together with guidelines for the interpretation of the table. 26 In this proceeding the item of central importance is item 23 which reads: "LEVEL 'B' Professional attendance involving taking a selective history, examination of the patient with implementation of a management plan in relation to 1 or more problems, OR a professional attendance of less than 20 minutes duration involving components of a service to which item 36, 37, 38, 40, 43, 44, 47, 48, 50 or 51 applies. SURGERY CONSULTATION (Professional attendance at consulting rooms) 23 Fee: $24.50 Benefit : 75% = $18.40 85% = $20.85" 27 The expression "clinically relevant service" is also defined in s 3 as: "a service rendered by a medical … practitioner … that is generally accepted in the medical … profession … as being necessary for the appropriate treatment of the patient to whom it is rendered." 28 In summary, a professional service rendered or initiated by a practitioner to an eligible person is one to which an item in the general medical services table relates and which is generally accepted as necessary for the appropriate treatment of the patient. The rendering or initiating of such a service attracts payment by the Commonwealth of a medicare benefit.